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March 14, 2007 |

Fast Track Health Care

IT'S NO SURPRISE that lawyers are often Type A personalities-workaholics, driven, competitive and obsessed with success. But the same men and women who wage war with the tobacco industry or represent defendants in high-profile cases often end up with heart attacks, strokes or hypertension. If they're lucky, the first health crisis serves as a chilling warning: It's time to re-prioritize.
11 minute read
December 13, 2010 |

Reduction in Force: Problems With a Commonly Used Approach

Harriet S. Zellner, president of Integral Research, and B. Bruce Zellner, a senior economic analyst at the company, write that before a reduction in force, a firm often stops replacing employees who leave voluntarily to reduce the number of terminations ultimately necessary. This might appear to be an unmitigated good, but as regards the accuracy of statistical testing for age discrimination charges, quite the opposite may be true.
13 minute read
November 15, 2006 |

Judge Rules PIP Online Processor Flouted Dispute-Resolution Patent

National Arbitration Forum, a company that processes personal injury protection claims, infringed on a patent for computerized dispute resolution, a federal judge in New Jersey has held. U.S. District Judge Mary Cooper granted summary judgment to plaintiff Cybersettle.
4 minute read
June 18, 2012 |

Panel Finds Past Abuse Admissible in Rape Case

The Third Department held that a man's abusive behavior toward his wife was relevant to his prosecution for the rape of her 15-year-old niece and provided probative context to the teenager's fear of defendant, that a history of alcohol abuse can be an aggravating factor in increasing a sex offender's risk level, and that a village may lure deer to locations where hunters could kill them, among other decisions.
9 minute read
September 12, 2005 |

Obesity Litigation Could Be on the Menu in Texas

Scrutinizing America's high-fat diet may help people enjoy longer, healthier lives, but it also raises the specter of a potential new area for mass tort liability: obesity litigation.
5 minute read
November 21, 2005 |

To Restore, or Not to Restore?

It's a building born out of controversy. And 144 years later � after squabbles involving Civil War munitions, lost remains, a faith healer and a horse in heat � the controversy continues. Built in 1861, the Cass County Courthouse, which sits in the northeast town of Linden, is the oldest continuously operated courthouse in Texas.
8 minute read
July 27, 2006 |

Chamberlain lawyer leads Henry County mall effort

ABIG RETAIL development in one of Atlanta's fastest-growing areas is being shepherded by Chamberlain, Hrdlicka, White, Williams Martin partner William D. Montgomery.The South Point Regional Retail Development in McDonough is a 75-acre development of retail space and residential units, located near Georgia Highway 20 and Interstate 75.
4 minute read
November 29, 2012 |

Circuit Rejects En Banc Review of Indian Access to U.S. Courts

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit yesterday refused to reconsider en banc a decision on American Indian land claims and tribal access to federal courts that dissenters said largely locks Indians out of the federal courthouse.
4 minute read
September 26, 2007 |

Litigator to Take Reins at Arnall Golden Gregory

Arnall Golden Gregory has elected Glenn Hendrix as the firm's new managing partner. He will take over in January from William Kitchens, who has led the 130-lawyer firm for 12 years. Hendrix is a litigator like Kitchens, practicing health care and international law, including international arbitration. He has spent his entire career at the firm, joining in 1985 after receiving his law degree from Emory University Law School. Hendrix says he wants to grow the firm, which could mean adding offices.
5 minute read

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